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This article is envisioned as one of a series documenting year-by-year occurrences pertaining to climate change. The series of articles will provide annual "snapshots" and "status updates" for future historians to determine "what was known, when" and "what happened, when".
- Post content that is specific to a particular year. The yearly status of ongoing phenomena or actions is acceptable, but general scientific principles and expansive historical reviews are inappropriate here.
- Make the text concise. (Background information, general principles, technical definitions, etc., should be put within citation footnotes, in the "Notes" section, or in other Wikipedia articles.)
- Though Wikipedia is not a newspaper, individual events that were important in the then-current year may be appropriate.
- Keep each entry brief, ideally a sentence or two.
- Keep content organized in meaningfully titled sections (listed below)—not one long list.
- Within each section, strive to arrange entries chronologically.
- Strive to maintain section titles consistent in articles from year to year.
- Initial section structure:
- Summaries — (prominent-source surveys putting the year in perspective)
- Measurements and statistics — (raw numerical values)
- Natural events and phenomena — (natural occurrences contributing to or resulting from climate change)
- Actions and goal statements (actions by humans; subsections:)
- Science and technology (e.g., measurement techniques, renewable energy technical advances, expeditions, etc.)
- Political, economic, legal, and cultural actions (causing or resulting from climate change)
- Mitigation goal statements — (e.g., climate emergency declarations, NDCs, net zero pledges, ...)
- Adaptation goal statements — (statements re coping with expected effects of climate change)
- Public opinion and scientific consensus — (scientific consensus studies, studies of public perceptions, etc.)
- Projections — (predictive estimates of future causes, effects, etc.)
- Significant publications — (major publications by prominent sources)
- See also — (links to other Wikipedia articles)
- Notes — (e.g., technical explanations not suitable for body text)
- References — (place full citations in bottom section, to keep narrative wikitext more compact)
- External links
— RCraig09 ( talk) 21:38, 5 January 2024 (UTC)
Current text needing some finetuning: "February (reported): a Copernicus Climate Change Service analysis indicated that from February 2023 through January 2024, global warming exceeded 1.5 °C for the first time.[3] This 365-day running average is distinct from the longer-duration 1.5 °C threshold agreed on in the 2015 Paris Agreement.[3]"
Uwappa ( talk) 12:02, 13 February 2024 (UTC)
That is published in 2024, but about 2023. Move it to 2023_in_climate_change? Uwappa ( talk) 20:27, 20 March 2024 (UTC)
Done —
RCraig09 (
talk) 20:31, 20 March 2024 (UTC)
Describe in intro that jan, feb, mar, apr, may and jun all were record high? See
Uwappa ( talk) 08:14, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
![]() | This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
![]() | This article links to one or more target anchors that no longer exist.
Please help fix the broken anchors. You can remove this template after fixing the problems. |
Reporting errors |
This article is envisioned as one of a series documenting year-by-year occurrences pertaining to climate change. The series of articles will provide annual "snapshots" and "status updates" for future historians to determine "what was known, when" and "what happened, when".
- Post content that is specific to a particular year. The yearly status of ongoing phenomena or actions is acceptable, but general scientific principles and expansive historical reviews are inappropriate here.
- Make the text concise. (Background information, general principles, technical definitions, etc., should be put within citation footnotes, in the "Notes" section, or in other Wikipedia articles.)
- Though Wikipedia is not a newspaper, individual events that were important in the then-current year may be appropriate.
- Keep each entry brief, ideally a sentence or two.
- Keep content organized in meaningfully titled sections (listed below)—not one long list.
- Within each section, strive to arrange entries chronologically.
- Strive to maintain section titles consistent in articles from year to year.
- Initial section structure:
- Summaries — (prominent-source surveys putting the year in perspective)
- Measurements and statistics — (raw numerical values)
- Natural events and phenomena — (natural occurrences contributing to or resulting from climate change)
- Actions and goal statements (actions by humans; subsections:)
- Science and technology (e.g., measurement techniques, renewable energy technical advances, expeditions, etc.)
- Political, economic, legal, and cultural actions (causing or resulting from climate change)
- Mitigation goal statements — (e.g., climate emergency declarations, NDCs, net zero pledges, ...)
- Adaptation goal statements — (statements re coping with expected effects of climate change)
- Public opinion and scientific consensus — (scientific consensus studies, studies of public perceptions, etc.)
- Projections — (predictive estimates of future causes, effects, etc.)
- Significant publications — (major publications by prominent sources)
- See also — (links to other Wikipedia articles)
- Notes — (e.g., technical explanations not suitable for body text)
- References — (place full citations in bottom section, to keep narrative wikitext more compact)
- External links
— RCraig09 ( talk) 21:38, 5 January 2024 (UTC)
Current text needing some finetuning: "February (reported): a Copernicus Climate Change Service analysis indicated that from February 2023 through January 2024, global warming exceeded 1.5 °C for the first time.[3] This 365-day running average is distinct from the longer-duration 1.5 °C threshold agreed on in the 2015 Paris Agreement.[3]"
Uwappa ( talk) 12:02, 13 February 2024 (UTC)
That is published in 2024, but about 2023. Move it to 2023_in_climate_change? Uwappa ( talk) 20:27, 20 March 2024 (UTC)
Done —
RCraig09 (
talk) 20:31, 20 March 2024 (UTC)
Describe in intro that jan, feb, mar, apr, may and jun all were record high? See
Uwappa ( talk) 08:14, 14 June 2024 (UTC)